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Sindbad's Fourth Voyage Rich and happy as I was after my
third voyage, I could not make up my mind to stay at home altogether.
My love of trading, and the pleasure I took in anything that was new and
strange,
At daylight we wandered inland, and
soon saw some huts, to which we directed our steps. As we drew near
their black inhabitants swarmed out in great numbers and surrounded us,
and we were led to their houses, and as it were divided among our captors.
I with five others was taken into a hut, where we were made to sit upon
the ground, and certain herbs were given to us, which the blacks made signs
to us to eat. Observing that they themselves did not touch them,
I was careful only to pretend to taste my portion; but my companions, being
very hungry, rashly ate up all that was set before them, and very soon
I had the horror of seeing them become perfectly mad. Though they chattered
incessantly I could not understand a word
For seven days I hurried on, resting
only when the darkness stopped me, and living chiefly upon cocoanuts, which
afforded me both meat and drink, and on the eighth day I reached the
seashore and saw a party of white men gathering pepper, which grew abundantly
all about.
The island on which I found myself
was full of people, and abounded in all sorts of desirable things, and
a great deal of traffic went on in the capital, where I soon began to feel
at home
One day the king sent for me and said, "Sindbad, I am going to ask a favour of you. Both I and my subjects esteem you, and wish you to end your days amongst us. Therefore I desire that you will marry a rich and beautiful lady whom I will find for you, and think no more of your own country." As the king's will was law I accepted
the charming bride he presented to me, and lived happily with her.
Nevertheless I had every intention of escaping at the first opportunity,
and going back to Bagdad. Things were thus going prosperously with me when
it happened that
"Heaven preserve you," said I, "and send you a long life!" "Alas!" he replied, "what is the good of saying that when I have but an hour left to live!" "Come, come!" said I, "surely it is not so bad as all that. I trust that you may be spared to me for many years." "I hope," answered he, "that your
life may be long, but as for me, all is finished. I have set my house
in order, and to-day I shall be buried with my wife. This has been
the law upon our island from the earliest ages--the living husband goes
to the grave with his dead wife, the living wife with her dead husband.
So did our fathers, and so must we do. The law changes not,
As he spoke the friends and relations of the unhappy pair began to assemble. The body, decked in rich robes and sparkling with jewels, was laid upon an open bier, and the procession started, taking its way to a high mountain at some distance from the city, the wretched husband, clothed from head to foot in a black mantle, following mournfully. When the place of interment was reached the corpse was lowered, just as it was, into a deep pit. Then the husband, bidding farewell to all his friends, stretched himself upon another bier, upon which were laid seven little loaves of bread and a pitcher of water, and he also was let down-down-down to the depths of the horrible cavern, and then a stone was laid over the opening, and the melancholy company wended its way back to the city. You may imagine that I was no unmoved spectator of these proceedings; to all the others it was a thing to which they had been accustomed from their youth up; but I was so horrified that I could not help telling the king how it struck me. "Sire," I said, "I am more astonished than I can express to you at the strange custom which exists in your dominions of burying the living with the dead. In all my travels I have never before met with so cruel and horrible a law." "What would you have, Sindbad?" he replied. "It is the law for everybody. I myself should be buried with the Queen if she were the first to die." "But, your Majesty," said I, "dare I ask if this law applies to foreigners also?" "Why, yes," replied the king smiling, in what I could but consider a very heartless manner, "they are no exception to the rule if they have married in the country." When I heard this I went home much cast down, and from that time forward my mind was never easy. If only my wife's little finger ached I fancied she was going to die, and sure enough before very long she fell really ill and in a few days breathed her last. My dismay was great, for it seemed to me that to be buried alive was even a worse fate than to be devoured by cannibals, nevertheless there was no escape. The body of my wife, arrayed in her richest robes and decked with all her jewels, was laid upon the bier. I followed it, and after me came a great procession, headed by the king and all his nobles, and in this order we reached the fatal mountain, which was one of a lofty chain bordering the sea. Here I made one more frantic effort
to excite the pity of the king and those who stood by, hoping to save myself
even at this last moment, but it was of no avail. No one spoke to
me, they even appeared to hasten over their dreadful task, and I speedily
found myself descending into the gloomy pit, with my seven loaves and pitcher
of water beside me. Almost before I reached the bottom the stone
was rolled into its place above my head, and I was left to my fate. A feeble
ray of light shone into the cavern through some chink, and when I had the
courage to look about me I could see that I was in a vast vault, bestrewn
with bones and bodies of the dead. I even fancied that I heard the expiring
sighs of those who, like myself, had come into this dismal place alive.
All in vain did I shriek aloud with rage and despair, reproaching myself
for the love of gain and adventure which had brought me to such a pass,
Here I lived in darkness and misery
until my provisions were exhausted, but just as I was nearly dead from
starvation the rock was rolled away overhead and I saw that a bier was
being lowered into the cavern, and that the corpse upon it was a man.
In a moment my mind was made up, the woman who followed had nothing to
expect but a lingering death; I should be doing her a service if I shortened
her misery. Therefore when she descended, already insensible from terror,
I was ready armed with a huge bone, one blow from which left her dead,
and I secured the bread and water which gave me a hope of life. Several
times did I have recourse to this desperate expedient, and I know not how
long I had been a prisoner when one day I fancied that I heard something
near me, which breathed loudly. Turning to the place from which the
sound came I dimly saw a shadowy form which fled at my movement, squeezing
itself through a cranny in the wall. I pursued it as fast as I could, and
found myself in a narrow crack
The mountains sloped sheer down to
the sea, and there was no road across them. Being assured of this
I returned to the cavern, and amassed a rich treasure of diamonds, rubies,
emeralds, and jewels of all kinds which strewed the ground. These
I made up into bales,
I found myself at last in Bagdad once more with unheard of riches of every description. Again I gave large sums of money to the poor, and enriched all the mosques in the city, after which I gave myself up to my friends and relations, with whom I passed my time in feasting and merriment. Here Sindbad paused, and all his hearers declared that the adventures of his fourth voyage had pleased them better than anything they had heard before. They then took their leave, followed by Hindbad, who had once more received a hundred sequins, and with the rest had been bidden to return next day for the story of the fifth voyage. When the time came all were in their
places, and when they had eaten and drunk of all that was set before them
Sindbad began his tale.
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